Yeah, I agree with the sentiment that it was on par with Batman Begins. I think it was a good film, but definitely not as good as 2008's The Dark Knight or The Avengers. It felt like there was a lot of filler in the first half of it, and a lack of screen time for both Catwoman and Batman. I understand why Bruce Wayne was away for so long, but still at one point, I was thinking to myself, "Is this a Batman film or a CSI episode?" I really enjoyed the last 40-50 minutes, and the ending but by that point I saw a lot that I felt was boring. Just one man's view.

I have absolutely no desire to see this movie. I hated Dark Knight and thought Batman Begins was just ok. I can't stand Nolan as a director. Only his early films were decent. Now he makes movies that rely heavily on plot and have almost no character development. I can't think of a single memorable character other than the Joker in any of his recent films.

I was so disappointed in the Dark Knight that I doubt I will even watch The Dark Knight Rises when it's released on dvd.

My thoughts as well. I wish they'd let someone who had respect for Batman make the movies.

Bruce Wayne/Batman was good, but Batman is BARELY IN IT. Seriously. He probably has 10-15 minutes of screen time, and his moments are not particularly great either.

Hold up. Wait. So, they made a nearly three hour Batman movie and barely even had any Batman in it?

One of my biggest criticism of Dark Knight was that Batman seemed like he didn't fit into his own movie and that Nolan seemed to be trying his hardest to pretend it wasn't a comicbook based movie.

If what you're saying is true, then it seems I was right. Nolan didn't want to make a movie with Batman in it.

Thinking back, I was exaggerating a little. He's in it fairly consistently in the final act, so he probably has 30 minutes of screen time. But seriously, he's really not in it as much as you'd think he would be, for what is supposedly a Batman film. As a percentage of the film, he is in it for less than The Dark Knight, and possibly in it for less than Batman Begins (harder to compare, since Batman doesn't exist for the first like hour of Batman Begins).

it would offer a chance for those who have not seen the characters to see the characters and a chance to reboot the characters and a chance to spin off all or some of the characters into their own films.

"So, DC Entertainment and Warner Brothers what are you going to do next?"

I quite enjoyed it and it tied many loose ends together. A few of the plot points and some of the dialogue felt a bit 'by the numbers' in some ways, which is my only detraction of an otherwise satisfying conclusion to the Nolan trilogy.

***********KIND OF SPOILERS*****************

I'll have to pull apart my main criticisms after I see it a second time, but the one part that bugged me most was Alfred telling Bruce the story about the child who climbed from the Pit, only to have the same story retold to us later. Literally the only purpose of Alfred saying these things was to throw people off the 'twist' regarding Bane's origins. You could have kept the same retelling of the story whilst Bruce was in the Pit and still kept the same mystery: it just seemed like lazy storytelling [eg how the hell did Alfred find out about this stuff? He just magically seemed to know everything] Could've been trimmed a bit better...

The Robin element was a nice touch, but the way they did the reveal of his name at the end was also a bit stupid for my tastes...

I have absolutely no desire to see this movie. I hated Dark Knight and thought Batman Begins was just ok. I can't stand Nolan as a director. Only his early films were decent. Now he makes movies that rely heavily on plot and have almost no character development. I can't think of a single memorable character other than the Joker in any of his recent films.

I was so disappointed in the Dark Knight that I doubt I will even watch The Dark Knight Rises when it's released on dvd.

My thoughts as well. I wish they'd let someone who had respect for Batman make the movies.

I have absolutely no desire to see this movie. I hated Dark Knight and thought Batman Begins was just ok. I can't stand Nolan as a director. Only his early films were decent. Now he makes movies that rely heavily on plot and have almost no character development. I can't think of a single memorable character other than the Joker in any of his recent films.

I was so disappointed in the Dark Knight that I doubt I will even watch The Dark Knight Rises when it's released on dvd.

My thoughts as well. I wish they'd let someone who had respect for Batman make the movies.

I have absolutely no desire to see this movie. I hated Dark Knight and thought Batman Begins was just ok. I can't stand Nolan as a director. Only his early films were decent. Now he makes movies that rely heavily on plot and have almost no character development. I can't think of a single memorable character other than the Joker in any of his recent films.

I was so disappointed in the Dark Knight that I doubt I will even watch The Dark Knight Rises when it's released on dvd.

My thoughts as well. I wish they'd let someone who had respect for Batman make the movies.

Yeah someone like Joel Schumacher!

For all the crap Joel gets, he at least realized he was making a Batman movie and didn't try to pretend it was something deeper and more profound.

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I loved the Nolan Batman movies. However without spoiling everything I'll only say that I went in with high expectations and it delivered up until the end. Near the end of the movie it started to p**s me off for reasons I'd have to make a list for. Right now I'm too tired to type it all up.

A lot of the characters in DC are hard to relate to. They're all ridiculously perfect, at least classically, whereas Marvel has long had more flawed and therefore more relatable characters. Batman is just the most "human" of the DC characters - he's clearly somewhat deranged himself, is physically a normal human, has a sad but simple backstory (compare it to Wonder Woman's or Superman's), etc. His villains are also generally more interesting, particularly in their modern incarnations. The animated Batman did wonders for a bunch of them, but even The Shark, who was created in 2005ish, is pretty cool.

I will say The Flash can be pretty good (also, his villains are often interesting, similar to Batman's - really liked the one shot story from Captain Cold's POV), and many of the B-lister DC characters are pretty cool - I quite like Jonah Hex, for example. But yeah, I generally like Marvel's characters much more too. I think this is a major reason their movies have much more success. More likable characters.